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Xi says China will boost cooperation with Sierra Leone, Nigeria

By WU JIAO at the United Nations and HEZI JIANG in New York (China Daily USA)

Updated: 2015-09-28 10:45:15

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China also agreed to cooperate with Sierra Leone on issues including Post 2015 Sustainable Development Goals, climate change, UN Security Council reform, and international and regional hot topics.

In his meeting with Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari, Xi noted that next year marks the 45th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic ties between the two countries. He said China is willing to strengthen cooperation and exchanges with Nigeria in a wide range of areas, including politics, trade, investment, finance, agriculture, education, security, international issues.

The two countries established diplomatic relations in 1971, and the relationship has expanded through increased trade and strategic cooperation. In the last 10 years, China's economic involvement with Africa has increased exponentially. China is working on developing special economic zones(SEZs) in sub-Saharan Africa, including two SEZs in Nigeria. Chinese are also building new roads, railways and airports across Nigeria.

Buhari expressed appreciation for China for its long support of and assistance to Nigeria in national security and economic development.

He said the bilateral cooperation has made progress in various areas, with infrastructure, agriculture and hydropower development emerging as highlights of that progress, and that the Nigerian government will continue to promote all-round development of bilateral relations with China.

The sixth ministerial meeting of Forum on China-Africa Cooperation will be held in December in South Africa. Xi invited Koroma to attend and play an active role at the meeting. This year also marks the 15th anniversary of the founding of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation, and Xi told Buhari that China agrees with the African side on the proposal to upgrade the December meeting to a summit.

On the same day that Xi and Koroma met, Sierra Leone began a second 42-day countdown to being Ebola-free as its last two known Ebola patients left a hospital and the country lifted quarantine restrictions in the north, Agence France-Presse reported. The World Health Organization (WHO) says a country can be declared Ebola-free 42 days after the last confirmed case has tested negative twice for the virus, once after each 21-day maximum incubation period.

Since first emerging in December 2013, the worst outbreak of Ebola in history has infected nearly 28,000 people and left some 11,300 dead, almost all in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea, according to the WHO.

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